Abstract

Southeast Asia has seen an increasing trend in extreme temperatures, with records of the highest surface air temperature being set in recent years. Heat waves are also increasing in frequency, severity and duration, with higher maximum temperatures being recorded both in daytime and nighttime. These trends are expected to intensify in the coming decades with climate change, with many implications for human health. For Southeast Asia, however, the number of studies quantifying future heat hazards and exposure are severely limited, but first analyses show that several countries in the region could see dramatic shifts in risk due to climate change. Therefore, it is imperative to quantify the heat stress that populations will be exposed to due to future extremes in the region. To this end, this study uses projections from Regional Climate Models to compute the Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) and Universal Thermal Climate Index (UTCI) as measures of extreme heat. WBGT has been widely used in studies of extreme heat and impacts, particularly in the case of outdoor physical work, and has been shown to be representative of heat stress in hot and humid environments, such as Southeast Asia. On the other hand, the UTCI is a newer metric which has been demonstrated to be applicable in a range of climatic conditions and representative of the human physiological response. Using the novel CORDEX-CORE dataset for Asia, WBGT and UTCI metrics for Southeast Asia are developed at a 22x22 km resolution up till 2100 using a wide range of ensemble simulations. Future population exposure to extreme heat is then computed for each country in the region, across a range of Shared Socioeconomic Pathway (SSP) scenarios. Our first results show that nearly the entire region will experience strong heat stress by mid-century and some countries will experience strong heat stress for most of the year by the end of the century.

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